Image of old HD to new HD

So i am trying to make an image of my old 60 gig HD to a new 250 HD using a usb hook up and thought i would try this out. Well it did its thing and and i swapped out the HD it didnt boot up. forgot the error... Anyhow so then i was just going to reformat and reinstall windows like i used to do... But the new HD will only format to the 60 gig size and doesnt see any of the other space... HOW DO I FIX that!

If you're trying to replace the 60 with the 250 and want to use the Image feature, after you create the Image, you then have to use the Recovery feature to make the 250 bootable - so you have to store the Image elsewhere.
But if it is the Clone feature that you want to use, try the reverse clone method where you put the new drive in place of the old one and the old drive in the usb enclosure.
To regain the lost space see if this will work for you:https://www.wilderssecurity.com/showpost.php?p=1044452&postcount=2

Well its a labtop with xp pro sp3... I redid it this morning after cmd line format e: but the disk only formated to the 60 gig and not the 250 but after running the image again am now using the new HD in the labtop

Problem is the disk says that all space is used up... there is no unallocated space, this is under the right click my computer/manage then clicking diskmanagement. It also doesnt show up under acronis. When i first attached it via usb it was 250 gig then using the cloning utility it shrunk it down to match.. I once had a HD that got a corrupted 0,0 s

I tried to do as instructed above but am only using the trial and it would not let me do it with the boot disk but i did do it under windows, and it did not work.

found a thread that was 2 years old and tried to use sectedit tool and rhpa and nhpa commands. Didnt work ... probably didnt edit the right thing as i didnt see lba-3 or something just clicked three times right and cleared data.

There is free utility called "testdisk", It is available as a livecd in gparted or as files you can run from within windows.
See if that can help you reclaim the lost partition. If that doesn't work see if doing a FIXMBR/FIXBOOT will help. Your original problem was restoring the MBR from the 60gb hard drive to new drive.

Also the reason it wouldn't boot was due to the CHS geometry being wrong. With laptops the new drive has to be inside the laptop connected to the motherboard when it is restored. Testdisk also has the capability of changing the CHS geometry on the restored drive to match original source hard drive. The normal hard drive head geometry is 255, some laptops use the 240 head geometry.

found a thread that was 2 years old and tried to use sectedit tool and rhpa and nhpa commands. Didnt work ... probably didnt edit the right thing as i didnt see lba-3 or something just clicked three times right and cleared data.

Click to expand...

poke44,

It does sound like our old friend, the Dell Media Direct problem. Have a look in Disk Management. What is the size of Disk 0? Now add up the sizes of each partition. What is the total? If there is a HPA you should have a 2 GB (approx) difference.

Double click sectedit.exe. In the Select Disk box choose Physical 0 and click Open. (DON’T choose any of the drive letters). Use the arrows at the bottom right to find LBA-3. It should take 3 clicks. Your sector may look slightly different to the image below but if you find the "[XLDR]" string in the lower right, that's a good clue that you are looking at the right sector.

Third is clear... as i tried to follow these directions from a thread you had going that i cant seem to find again and you have way to many posts to sift through.

So in sumation
I ran this program friday morning and made the third click to the right clean
then booted with the rmha disk you had and thought i followed those directions and there was a difference in the numbers from starting and when i rebooted but after pulling the cd out and rebooting windows it was still small

I did a search for the string xldr and XLDR and got a hit or two but then i added the square brackets with small type and didnt find anything or large well i did but it was your text so thinking that is wrong.

there is some stuff on the first sector but the next ones are clear for a bit